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Le Front de l'Yser (Flandre) par Georges-Émile Lebacq

Depiction of the Yser Front by the Belgian artist Georges-Émile Lebacq (1917)

The Yser Front (French, Dutch language: Front aan de IJzer ), also known as the Flemish Front, was a section of the Western Front during World War I held by Belgian troops from October 1914 until 1918. The front ran along the Yser (IJser) river in the far north-west of Belgium and defended a small strip of the country which remained unoccupied. The front was established following the Battle of the Yser in October 1914, when the Belgian army succeeded in stopping the German advance after months of retreat.

Location[]

During the early campaigns of 1914, the Belgian army had been pushed out of the fortified cities of Liège, Namur and Antwerp by the German advance. Although they succeeded in delaying the Germans at some actions, they were forced to withdraw, first to Antwerp, and into the far north-west of Belgium. By October 1914, the Belgian forces were holding a position along the Yser and Yperlee canal. After months of retreat, the Belgians forces were considerably reduced and were exhausted. They flooded a large expanse of territory in front of their lines, stretching as far south as Diksmuide. Between 16 and 31 October, the Belgians held off the German army at the Battle of the Yser, suffering 3,500 killed and 15,000 wounded.[1] The Battle of the Yser established a front line which would endure until 1918.

The Yser Front stretched from the Belgian North Sea coast between Nieuwpoort and Westende, stretching south-east along the Yper river, encompassing both Ramskapelle and Pervijze. From Pervijze, the line then arched south-east between the Yser and Yperlee, down to Oudekapelle and Reninge. Diksmuide had fallen to German forces shortly before the Battle of the Yser.

Yser Front[]

The Belgian High Command, under King Albert I, vetoed all Belgian involvement in Allied offensives, which he felt to be both costly and ineffective.[1] By November 1914, just 52,000 of the originally 117,000-strong field army were present on the Yser but it was joined by new recruits from unoccupied Belgium.

See also[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 De Schaepdrijver 2006, p. 171.

Bibliography[]

  • De Schaepdrijver (2006). La Belgique et la Première Guerre Mondiale. Brussels: Peter Lang. 

External links[]

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